Most parents' biggest concern is whether their child will be safe and comfortable. The things worth actually focusing on are different: understanding the guarantor obligation before signing it, knowing what the real total cost looks like, and being clear on when to be involved in accommodation decisions and when to let your child manage it. This guide covers all of it, honestly.
You are signing a legally binding commitment to pay your child's rent and cover damage costs if they do not. This is not a formality: it is a real legal obligation for the full duration of the tenancy. A guarantor agreement is a separate document from the tenancy contract. You should read it fully before signing: understand the duration of your liability, what you could be asked to pay and whether there is a joint and several liability clause (meaning you could theoretically be pursued for other tenants' arrears too, in private renting).
The headline weekly rent figure does not tell the full story. For university halls and PBSA, bills are usually included but food is not: add £35 to £55 per week for groceries. For private renting, add bills (£20 to £35 per person per week) on top of rent. The realistic total annual accommodation cost for a student in halls or PBSA is £9,000 to £14,000 depending on the city. Private renting can be cheaper, but upfront costs (security deposit, holding deposit, first month) are significant.
University halls are the most common first-year choice: your university manages them, no guarantor is usually needed, and support is on hand. PBSA (purpose-built student accommodation from providers like Unite Students, iQ and Student Roost) is a commercial alternative with private bathroom and bills included: guarantor usually required. Private renting is a shared house for second and third years: cheapest but most complex, with a joint tenancy contract and a landlord relationship to manage. There is no universally best option: the right one depends on your child's circumstances.
Genuinely: unprotected deposits in private renting, a landlord who is unresponsive to serious maintenance issues, a property with clear safety deficiencies (non-functioning smoke alarms, damp that affects health, broken locks), or a situation where your child is in significant distress and not engaging with the support available. The accommodation situations that genuinely require parental intervention are rarer than parental anxiety suggests, but they do happen. Knowing what they look like is more useful than general worry.
Accommodation providers quote weekly rent. University websites quote annual contract values. What parents and students actually need to know is the realistic all-in cost of a year's accommodation, including everything that the headline figure does not. The breakdown below uses realistic 2025/26 figures.
The three main student accommodation types have different implications for parents in terms of cost, contract commitments, your role as a guarantor, and the support available to your child if problems arise.
Being a guarantor is not a formality. It is a legal commitment. Most parents who sign guarantor agreements have not read them properly: the request arrives by email with a link to "complete your verification" and signing takes a few minutes. The legal obligation lasts for the duration of the tenancy, which is typically a full academic year or 12 months.
These are the standard terms in most UK student accommodation guarantor agreements. They apply whether the agreement is for a PBSA contract or a private rental tenancy:
| What you agree to | In plain terms | Maximum exposure |
|---|---|---|
| Rent payment if your child defaults | If your child stops paying rent for any reason, you are liable to pay it instead | Full remaining rent for the contract period |
| Damage costs beyond fair wear and tear | If the property is damaged and the deposit does not cover the cost, you can be asked to pay the shortfall | Determined by the extent of damage |
| Duration of liability | Your liability runs for the full length of the tenancy or licence: usually 40 to 52 weeks | Full contract duration |
| Joint and several liability (private renting) | In some private tenancy guarantor agreements, you may be liable for all tenants' rent, not just your child's share | Full joint tenancy rent if all tenants default |
| Your right to receive a copy | You are entitled to receive and read the full guarantor agreement before signing: not just a summary | Not applicable |
Most PBSA providers and private landlords require a guarantor who is: over 18, not currently a student, a UK resident, and either a homeowner or earning at least 2.5 to 3 times the annual rent. If you do not meet the income threshold or are not a UK resident, your child may need to use a guarantor service (typically 3 to 5% of annual rent as a one-off fee) or choose university halls, which usually do not require a guarantor.
The accommodation calendar has specific windows that close without warning. Most parents who feel caught off guard by accommodation decisions are simply not aware of when things happen.
Application portals go live for first years. PBSA booking systems open. Early bird rooms available.
Apply nowIn these cities, good student houses start going before Christmas. Relevant for second year planning.
Be awareMost universities' guaranteed accommodation deadline falls here. After this date, first years may be on a waiting list.
CriticalBest student houses let in this window in most UK cities. Relevant for children planning second year.
Act nowOnce your child books PBSA or agrees a private let, the verification email comes to you. Complete it within 48 hours.
Respond fastIf your child does not get their grades, PBSA cancellation policies apply within 72 hours. Know the policy before results day.
Know the policyOften staggered by time slot. Parking must usually be pre-booked. Help with the move but let them lead the process.
Plan logisticsLandlord has 10 days to return the deposit after the tenancy ends. If deductions are proposed, your child has a right to dispute through the protection scheme.
Check depositMost student accommodation is adequate and well-managed. The concerns most parents have (poor food, shared bathrooms, noisy corridors) are quality-of-life issues, not safety ones. The safety checks worth doing are specific and verifiable. If you are helping your child view a private rental property before they sign, these are the things to ask about or look for.
A valid annual Gas Safety Certificate (CP12) is a legal requirement for any property with gas appliances. The landlord must provide a copy before you move in and annually thereafter. If the landlord cannot produce one, do not proceed.
Properties must have a valid EICR issued within the last 5 years (since 2020 regulations). The landlord must provide a copy before the tenancy starts. An EICR identifies any electrical faults.
A legal requirement in all rental properties. Must be tested and working at the start of each tenancy. Check there is one on each floor of the property and that it works.
Required wherever there is a gas boiler, open fire, or wood-burning stove. Not the same as a smoke alarm. Check one is present if the property has any of these.
Properties rented by 5 or more people sharing facilities must have a mandatory HMO licence from the local council. Ask to see it. Some councils require licences for smaller HMOs too.
Check that all external doors and ground-floor windows have functional locks. Ask whether there is a secure entry system for the building if applicable.
Ask when the boiler was last serviced. A boiler that is unreliable or approaching end of life is a significant issue in a shared student house, particularly in winter.
Check walls, window frames and corners of bathrooms for mould or condensation staining. Some damp is cosmetic; black mould affecting large areas is a health issue and must be addressed by the landlord.
Particularly relevant in older converted properties. Poor stair lighting is a genuine safety issue.
The accommodation decisions that go well are almost always those where the student takes ownership and the parent provides support rather than direction. The ones that go badly are often those where parental anxiety drives decisions that the student has not fully bought into: living in a building chosen by a parent, in a room type the parent preferred, in a location the parent felt was safer. These good-intention decisions tend to make students feel less in control of their own lives at a time when developing that sense of control is part of the point.
Most accommodation problems that students face are manageable and normal: a difficult housemate, a slow maintenance response, a noisy corridor. These are part of the independent living experience and are best resolved by your child, with guidance from you if they ask for it. The situations that warrant active parental involvement are different.
If a private landlord is failing to address a dangerous property condition (broken locks, persistent gas leak or CO alarm trigger, black mould affecting health, electrical problems), your child should report to the council's environmental health team and contact the university housing advice service. If urgent and the landlord is unresponsive, the council has powers to require immediate remediation. Your role: encourage your child to use these formal channels and follow up if they are struggling to engage with the process.
A landlord who has not protected a security deposit in a government-approved scheme within 30 days has broken the law. Your child is entitled to compensation of 1 to 3 times the deposit amount and the landlord cannot serve a valid eviction notice. The students union housing advisor is the right first contact. You can support by helping your child check the three schemes (DPS, MyDeposits, TDS) and understanding the process, but the formal steps should be taken by your child.
If your child needs to leave their accommodation for welfare reasons (mental health crisis, family emergency, medical condition) the university's welfare or counselling team and the accommodation provider's welfare process are both relevant. University halls and most PBSA providers have formal welfare exit processes. Your role: help your child identify the right contacts and support them through the process, not attempt to negotiate directly with the provider on their behalf unless your child cannot do so.
If the landlord proposes deductions your child believes are unfair at the end of the tenancy, the protection scheme's free Alternative Dispute Resolution service is the correct channel. Your child submits evidence and a statement; the adjudicator makes a binding decision. No solicitor is needed. The students union housing advisor can help prepare the submission. Your role: help gather the photographic evidence taken at move-in and support the preparation, but let your child lead the process.
Shared bathrooms are unhygienic and a welfare concern.
Shared bathrooms in university halls are cleaned by housekeeping staff 2 to 3 times per week. Most modern halls and PBSA use pod systems with individual lockable shower cubicles. The vast majority of students sharing bathrooms adapt quickly and report no significant issues. This is the most commonly expressed parental concern and the one with the least connection to actual student welfare outcomes.
My child needs to be in the safest building in the best location, whatever it costs.
UK university accommodation, across all types, is generally safe. The specific concerns that relate to building safety (gas, fire, electrical) are legally regulated. The location anxiety that leads parents to push for more expensive accommodation is usually about distance from home or perceived area quality rather than genuine safety risk. A student in an affordable self-catered hall 15 minutes' walk from campus is not less safe than one in a premium PBSA building next to the library.
Signing as guarantor is just a formality they need me to do.
It is a legal obligation. See the guarantor section of this guide. The frequency with which parents sign guarantor agreements without reading them is the single biggest practical gap between parental involvement and actual risk management in student accommodation. Read the agreement. It takes 10 minutes. It is not a formality.
If there is a problem with the accommodation I should contact the university.
Universities' welfare and accommodation teams are there for your child, not for you. They will generally decline to discuss individual students' situations with parents without the student's explicit consent (GDPR applies). Your child is an adult and the university's relationship is with them. You can help your child identify the right contact and support them in reaching out, but contacting the university directly usually does not produce the result parents expect and sometimes makes things harder for the student.
University halls are always safer and better supervised than PBSA or private renting.
University halls have welfare and support infrastructure that PBSA partially replicates and private renting does not. But "supervised" is not quite the right word for any student accommodation: these are adults living independently. The support available in halls is there when needed, not monitoring daily life. The safety and welfare of your child at university is primarily a function of how they engage with available support, not of the supervision level of the building type.
Unifresher's accommodation section covers every aspect of student accommodation from application to exit: PBSA providers, private renting, deposits, contracts and city-by-city comparisons. Written for students, by students.
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